Is Going Off Seamless the 21st-Century Version of Keeping Kosher?
On June 18, I ordered an omelet, a small salad, a wedge of feta cheese, some toast, black coffee, and two rugelach cookies for breakfast. For lunch, it was General Tso’s chicken with a side of pork fried rice and a ginger ale. Dinner found me in the mood for a large Greek salad, grilled chicken and vegetable kebabs, and a side of garlicky tzatziki, extra pita on the side.
I’m telling you this for three reasons. First, to suggest that I love to eat. Second, to prove that, regrettably, I do not obey any dietary restrictions, religious or otherwise. And third, because all three meals were procured using the popular food-ordering application Seamless, a service that I once dearly loved but am now determined, in an odd 21st-century take on keeping kosher, never to use again.
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